My perspective on Jewish life, chinuch/parenting, psychology, social issues, health ...
Sep 2, 2013
From Hopeless to Hope in an Instant
In a recent news item, a man in Ohio, Tony Yahle, was given up by the doctors and declared dead. And yet, 45 minutes after his heart stopped beating he began to show signs of life. They say he fully awoke at the hospital five days later.
The cardiologist, Dr. Raja Nazir, said, "In the last 20 years, I've never seen anybody who we have pronounced dead ... and then for him to come back, I've never seen it. Actually, I've never heard of it."
The man's 18 year old son said, his father went "from hopeless to hope in an instant.”
That last line stood out for me.
We have a phrase for that: yeshuas Hashem k'heref ayin (the salvation of Hashem like the blink of an eye).
I looked up how fast is a blink of an eye and found this: On average, a human eye takes between 300 and 400 milliseconds to complete a single blink. That's roughly between three-tenths and four-tenths of a second.
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